Prof. Steve Furber: Building brains

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When his concept of the universal computing machine finally became an engineering reality, Alan Turing speculated on the prospects for such machines to emulate human thinking. Although computers now routinely perform impressive feats of logic and analysis, such as searching the vast complexities of the global internet for information in a second or two, they have progressed much more slowly than Turing anticipated towards achieving normal human levels of intelligent behaviour, or perhaps "common sense". Why is this?

Perhaps the answer lies in the fact that the principles of information processing in the brain are still far from understood. But progress in computer technology means that we can now realistically contemplate building computer models of the brain that can be used to probe these principles much more readily than is feasible, or ethical, with a living biological brain.

Presented by Professor Steve Furber , School of Computer Science, Manchester University

Recorded on Friday 11 May 2012 at the Informatics Forum, The University of Edinburgh.

The Turing Research Symposium was organised by the Royal Society of Edinburgh and the University of Edinburgh School of Informatics in partnership with SICSA and supported by Cambridge University Press.
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Well from a layman's point of view, nothing much seems to have happened in the last decade of computing. We now have Siri and Alexa and we still have problems communicating with women oops I mean computers. Most of the advances seem to be in cameras and displays and games.

petehiggins